People walk by Paphos Gate near the United Nations Buffer Zone in Nicosia, Cyprus.—Reuters
CRANS-MONTANA: More than 40 years since Turkish troops invaded northern Cyprus, the presence of tens of thousands of soldiers on the Mediterranean island looms large over make-or-break peace negotiations this week.
Ankara maintains more than 35,000 troops in Cyprus, and analysts say that their fate will determine whether UN-mediated attempts to reunite Greek- and Turkish-Cypriot communities are successful.
“The security issue is so important because it’s linked to historic traumas,” said Hubert Faustmann, a political science professor at the University of Nicosia.
The 1974 invasion of Cyprus, in response to an Athens-inspired putsch seeking union with Greece, was one of the bloodiest episodes in post-war Europe. It left hundreds dead and forced tens of thousands from their homes.
More than 1,200 civilians are still missing today.
Faustmann said that the Turkish soldiers — plus around 1,000 Greek troops — on Cyprus today offer some comfort to the two communities.
“The Turkish-Cypriots feel they were deprived of their political rights in a violent attack from the Greek-Cypriots. The Greek-Cypriots were attacked by Turkish troops. [Both] need a safeguard against a repetition,” he said. “It’s a classic security dilemma.”
It is one that has scuppered previous peace drives and the issue tops the billing at UN-brokered negotiations this week in the Swiss resort of Crans-Montana.
A diplomatic source told AFP before the talks kicked off on Wednesday that Turkey was willing to slash its troop presence by 80 per cent in order to reach a deal.
But according to Harry Tzimitras, director of the Nicosia-based PRIO think tank, “the devil is in the detail” of Turkey’s offer.
“It’s a matter of principle” for some Greek Cypriots, Tzimitras said. “If there’s a reduction of 10 per cent or 90 per cent, there is still a presence of an invading power as they see it.”
Solve security, solve Cyprus
Complicating matters are Cyprus’ so-called guarantor powers — Greece, Turkey and Britain — who retain the right to intervene militarily and therefore must assent to any security resolution.
Tzimitras said the Turkish troops controversy mattered “not only because of the physical presence of armies on the island but also because it’s the one area where the international community comes in”.
Britain, which still operates two military base areas in Cyprus, has indicated willingness to cede some territory in order to expedite a deal.
Other areas of dispute — including the potential resettlement of and compensation for the thousands of families who fled their homes in 1974 — are also intrinsically linked to security.
As UN envoy Espen Barth Eide put it as talks opened on Wednesday: “Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.” The United Nations currently has around 950 peacekeepers monitoring a de facto ceasefire on the island, and could choose to wield the stick of paring back its personnel should the Crans-Montana talks fail.
“After decades of pouring resources into the Cyprus problem, the UN may signal that it wants to reduce its presence on the island and its meditation efforts, in part to push the Cypriot communities to take more initiative themselves,” said James Sawyer, a Turkey and Cyprus researcher at the Eurasia Group think tank.
Any deal reached in the Swiss Alps would need to be put to twin referendums among Greek- and Turkish-Cypriot communities, and if a solution to the security question can be found, analysts believe efforts to end one of the world’s longest-running conflicts might finally bear fruit.
“A deal on security would mean the beginning of the final give and take,” Faustmann said. “If you have a deal on security you likely get a solution to the Cyprus problem. If you don’t the talks will fail.”—AFP
Published in Dawn, June 30th, 2017